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in Sea History

by Richard King

ore than 500 years ago, Christopher Colum- thin soft body. Many of these bivalve live all around bus was trying to get his crew and small fleet the world. One of the most common in the North Atlan- back to Spain as he completed his fourth and tic that infest wooden ships, pilings, docks, and dikes final trip to the West Indies. Yet he was un- has the scientific name navalis. This comes from able to start sailing his ships home across the Greek for “wood worm” and from the Latin for “of the Atlantic because his small fleet was sinking. They ships.” The shipworm species that ate up Columbus’s tried to limp along, but his remaining two caravels were fleet was almost certainly a different, more tropical “riddled with holes as a honeycomb.” Christopher Co- species—very similar, but even bigger! lumbus wrote about trying to sail to Jamaica: “With As a tiny larva floating in the ocean, the shipworm three pumps, pots and cauldrons and all hands at work, lands on a hull or piling and immediately begins to bore I still could not keep down the water that entered the into the surface of the wood with two rasp-like shells. ship, and there was nothing we could do to meet the The gets all the nutrients it needs from the wood damage done by the shipworm.” With the decks near- and expels its waste with a little tail-like . With a ly awash, his two ships La Capitana and Santiago de shell plate, it can close the “back door” if disturbed or Palos barely floated into what is now called St. Ann’s if environmental conditions are poor. Shipworms are Bay. able to live for weeks without air or water. The clams The wood in Columbus’s ship was not filled with tunnel parallel to each other somehow, so in the hulls worms exactly, but, instead, with a type of clam with a of Columbus’s ships they could sense each other’s path, never crossing, thus slowly eating away the planks from the inside. As early as 350 B.C.E., Theo- phrastus wrote about shipworms compromising the vessels of An- cient Greece, and the clams have since plagued mariners’ ships until the 20th-century invention of steel and fiberglass hulls. Early mariners well before Columbus used coatings such as wax or tar on ship bottoms. Columbus had tried these strategies, too. Early navigators also tried to spend time in fresh water harbors or rivers to try to kill the clams. It seems Co- lumbus tried this also! Later ship owners turned to copper sheathing and toxic bottom paints with copper and other chemicals that would be poisonous to shipworms and other organisms that bore or damage ship bottoms. Historians explain that the copper sheathing used on English 46 SEA HISTORY 152, AUTUMN 2015 ships made the difference in a major battle in 1780 against the Spanish navy, whose vessels were weakened and already sinking from shipworm holes. Shipbuilders of large wooden vessels also took to fastening a “worm shoe,” a layer of sacrificial wood beneath the keel. Today, if wooden pilings and docks are not regularly covered with deterrent chemicals, shipworms remain a problem. This is often an unexpected drawback when people are working to improve the water quality in harbors and waterways. Back in 1503, with his ships irreparable from shipworm

damage and some of his skilled sailors dead from ear- deplewsk via wikimedia commons lier skirmishes with native peoples, Columbus and his (above) A shipworm extracted from the wood of a mangrove 100-plus men remained shipwrecked on the coast of at the mouth of the Amazon in Brazil. (left) Damage to wood by the teredo worm was often extensive enough to sink a ship. Jamaica for more than a year. They survived their own mutiny, lack of food, and conflicts with Taino native peoples. Finally, in June of 1504, two Spanish ships from Hispaniola ar- rived on the coast to rescue them. Columbus navigated the vessels back home to Spain, this time to stay for good and spend his time retired from the sea, spinning yarns about the aggressive Caribbean worms (although he believed them to be Asian worms, since he thought he was in Chinese waters.) In the next issue: Fish that sunk ships? For past “Animals in Sea History,” go to

michael c. rygel via wikimedia commons michael c. rygel www.seahistory.org. SEA HISTORY 152, AUTUMN 2015 47